SWLAW Blog | Faculty Features
November 12, 2025
Faculty Accomplishments, Fall 2025
Our October faculty digest highlights Southwestern scholars whose work is shaping courts, campuses, national media, and beyond.
Meera Deo, Andrea Freeman, & Jyoti Nanda
- On October 23-25, Meera, Andrea, and Jyoti attended UCLA鈥檚 Critical Race Studies Symposium: .

- Meera presented on a panel entitled: Beyond Resistance to the War on Higher Ed. Meera discussed ongoing attacks on higher education and shared research stemming from her forthcoming piece, , to help guide administrators and policymakers on appropriate responses to extralegal mandates.

- Andrea moderated a panel entitled: Praxis at the Table: Student-Led Critical Food Law Education.

- Jyoti led a concurrent session with three colleagues (from Loyola L.A., Northwestern, and Stanford) entitled: Imprisoning Disability: Using CRT and DisCrit to Abolish the Carceral State. In this session, Jyoti discussed how CRT influences her clinical and doctrinal teaching, her writing, and her research, and she explained how DisCrit (which draws heavily on CRT) shapes the way we think about disability as it intersects with law and power.

Ronald Aronovsky
- On October 25, Ronald attended the at UC Law San Francisco. As the 2025 Chair-Elect of the AALS ADR Section, Ronald delivered welcoming remarks to Conference attendees, touching on the WIP Conference鈥檚 inclusive tradition of welcoming experienced and junior scholars alike to present works-in-progress at all stages of development. Later in the Conference, Ronald presented his own work-in-progress, FAA Section 1: A Pathway for State Regulation of Adhesion Arbitration, which explores the evolution of the Supreme Court's Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) jurisprudence regarding the FAA鈥檚 Section 1 exemption for transportation worker arbitration agreements and its preemptive pro-adhesion policy. Ronald shows how this jurisprudence could offer states authority to ban or regulate adhesive arbitration agreements, potentially paving the way for broader reform.
Paul Bateman
- On October 10, Paul spoke at an Opinion Writing Seminar held at The of the Yuhaaviatam of San Manuel Nation in Highland, California. Those in attendance included trial and appellate division judges along with members of the tribe's judicial council. Paul鈥檚 presentation focused on how to present the court's opinions in an accessible format and style.

Christopher Cameron & Meera Deo
- On October 31, Chris and Meera both spoke as invited panelists at the UC Davis Law Review鈥檚 Symposium event: . This symposium highlighted the many contributions of Dean Kevin R. Johnson, 鈥渨hose work has had a profound and lasting impact on the intersection of immigration law and race, leadership in legal education, diversity of the legal academy, and the advancement of justice through civil procedure.鈥 Chris and Meera presented on a panel entitled Transforming the Legal Academy, which also featured remarks from Angela Onwuachi-Willig, Jasmine Harris, and Irene Oritseweyinmi Joe.
- Chris gave a presentation entitled: Kevin R. Johnson: First Chicano on the Harvard Law Review.

- Meera presented her forthcoming Article, The Legal Academy: Past, Present, Future, which draws on data from both her first book project () and the new SELFS Study of law faculty. Meera highlighted unique challenges and opportunities facing the legal academy, while also discussing Kevin鈥檚 positive impact.

Chris Cameron
- On October 29, Chris spoke at the event, , at the Audrey Irmas Pavilion in Los Angeles. 鈥淭he evening brought together longtime partners, community leaders, board members, and staff to honor a legacy that began with the Century Freeway Housing Program and continues today through our work financing, building, and operating affordable homes across California.鈥 Chris鈥檚 talk was entitled: A Tribute to Judge Harry Pregerson on the 30th Anniversary of Century Housing.
- On October 3, Chris attended the in Seattle, Washington. At the Conference, Chris participated in panel discussions themed around Evidentiary Issues, Discipline & Discharge, and Applying the Rules of Contract Interpretation. Chris also gave a presentation entitled: Contract Interpretation in Labor Arbitration.
Meera Deo
- On September 19, Meera spoke as part of an invite-only gathering jointly sponsored by the and AALS in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: The Access Imperative Convening. Meera presented on a panel entitled Access to Legal Education, organized to advise deans and other university leaders regarding how to navigate ongoing challenges in legal education. Meera鈥檚 remarks drew from her forthcoming piece, , which urges administrators to think beyond the binary (resist versus comply) and instead consider compliance as a spectrum on which we can choose to minimally comply with legal requirements without over-complying out of fear.
Andrea Freeman
- On October 18, Andrea was interviewed by for an episode of the New Books Network podcast. The episode is entitled: .
- On October 11, Andrea was interviewed by for the Diverse Voices Book Review podcast. The episode is entitled: .
- On October 4, Andrea participated in at Harvard Law School. At the Summit, Andrea led a workshop on Food Oppression.

- On October 3, Andrea spoke as a panelist for the Southwestern Law Review鈥檚 Symposium event, Food, Justice, and History. The forthcoming Symposium issue features works relating to Andrea鈥檚 book, .

KJ Greene
- On October 10, KJ was invited by Howard Law School鈥檚 Institute for IP and Social Justice to present his ongoing project on copyright law and African American Girl Groups.

Hila Keren
- On October 18, Hila attended the in Denver, Colorado, where she presented her work-in-progress, . In her draft and Conference remarks, Hila identifies 鈥渃onstitutional opportunism鈥 as a troubling phenomenon reflective of the stealth ways in which the Supreme Court鈥檚 conservative supermajority misuses constitutional doctrine and the procedures of our constitutional order to pursue ideological goals. Hila deploys the recent and severe attacks on LGBTQ+ rights, and the very legitimacy of LGBTQ+ identities, as a case study to demonstrate one of many possible contexts in which conservatives misuse precedent and procedure to achieve ideological ends (with reproductive and environmental justice as two additional likely examples). Hila also discusses proposals for resistance, accounting for the current structure and politics of the Court.
Faisal Kutty
- On October 22, Faisal was quoted in a Newsweek Writers鈥 Verdicts piece: Faisal argued that Mamdani won the debate by focusing on affordability, housing, and local issues while maintaining composure and compassion in the face of Islamophobic attacks. Faisal also highlighted Mamdani鈥檚 defense of universal human rights and his call for dignity and justice for working New Yorkers.
- On October 15, Faisal by AcademicInfluence.com for scholarly impact, which ranked him among the world鈥檚 top academics in both Law and International Law. AcademicInfluence.com consists of 鈥渁 team of academics and data scientists working to provide an objective, non-gameable, influence-based ranking for the people, schools, and disciplinary programs that make up higher education.鈥 鈥淚n creating our ranking methodology, we engineered an innovative and unbiased ranking technology that employs machine learning to measure the impact of work produced by the world鈥檚 top institutions and academics.鈥
- On October 2, Faisal participated in a debate, published by Newsweek, opposite former Trump senior advisor Steve Cortes: Cortes defended President Trump鈥檚 and Prime Minister Netanyahu鈥檚 proposed Gaza plan as a step toward peace and an example of American realism and restraint, while Faisal countered that the proposal perpetuates injustice by forcing Palestinians鈥攖he victims鈥攖o "negotiate away" accountability for their persecutors. Faisal further argued that leadership requires a refusal to underwrite policies that violate international law and moral principle, and that genuine peace requires justice, accountability, and self-determination for Palestinians.
- On October 1, Faisal was featured (for the sixteenth consecutive year) in the annual publication: . The report is created by The Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Centre, which is an independent research entity affiliated with the Royal Aal al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought鈥攁n international, non-governmental institute headquartered in Amman, Jordan. The report is also produced in cooperation with the Prince Al-Waleed Bin Talal Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding at Georgetown University. It recognizes individuals for their significant contributions toward the betterment of the global Muslim community, including leadership and impact in North America.
Jyoti Nanda
- On October 5, Jyoti attended the annual at the New York University School of Law. In a three-hour session, Jyoti workshopped her forthcoming Article, Feminist Theorizing (in Casefile Review): Centering Girls and Gender Expansive Youth Across Juvenile Carceral Systems, with a group of clinical law professors.
- On October 3, Jyoti attended the Bellow Scholars Workshop at Columbia Law School. The Workshop was jointly sponsored by Columbia Law School, the AALS Section on Clinical Legal Education, and the AALS Commission on Lawyering in Public Interest. As a , Jyoti presented her forthcoming Article, Feminist Theorizing (in Casefile Review): Centering Girls and Gender Expansive Youth Across Juvenile Carceral Systems. During this all-day Workshop, she received thoughtful feedback from discussants and colleagues at UCLA Law, the University of Washington School of Law, and Cornell Law School.
Orly Ravid
- On October 30, Orly virtually participated in Greenlight Women鈥檚 Indie Filmmaking Series for an event, , focused on the state of documentary financing in the current political climate.
- On October 29, Orly gave a virtual presentation for an MCLE-credit session organized by the (NSEAL). The session was entitled , and Orly participated in discussions centered on SAG-AFTRA, copyright, trademark, financing, right of publicity & defamation issues, and licensing.

- On October 28, Orly served as a juror for Israeli Short Films at the Tel Aviv International LGBTQ+ Film Festival ().
Rachel VanLandingham
- On October 30, Rachel was quoted in a Pittsburgh Post-Gazette article, , discussing the creeping authoritarianism exemplified by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth鈥檚 鈥渟ophomoric鈥 vision of lethality.
- On October 24, Rachel appeared on PBS Newshour in a segment entitled: U.S. deploys aircraft carrier to Caribbean as strikes on suspected drug boats intensify. In this segment, Rachel discusses the domestic and international illegality of the current military operation in the Caribbean. You can watch the clip .
- On October 21, Rachel was quoted in a Washington Examiner article entitled: . In this piece, Rachel offers her legal analysis of a Ninth Circuit panel鈥檚 decision to stay a lower court鈥檚 TRO that had prevented the President from federalizing National Guard troops and deploying them to Portland.
- On October 20, Rachel was cited in a Modern Diplomacy article, , regarding two survivors of the Administration鈥檚 unlawful military strikes against alleged drug smuggling boats in the Caribbean and Western Pacific.
- On October 15, Rachel was interviewed for an OPB article entitled: . In the article, Rachel was quoted as stating: 鈥淚n L.A. it was already a stretch.鈥 鈥淗ere,鈥 in Oregon, 鈥渋t鈥檚 beyond a stretch.鈥 鈥淭here鈥檚 simply no facts to support any kind of straight-faced justification or rationale that ICE agents are unable to do their job, and therefore they need military members to come in and help them do their job.鈥
- On October 13, Rachel was interviewed for and cited in an article published in the Huffington Post entitled: . In this article, Rachel offers her expertise regarding the legal authorities (and lack thereof) of National Guard men and women acting and interacting with civilians in American cities.
- On October 7, Rachel appeared on a leading Australian news channel (ABC News) segment entitled, , to discuss the criminality of the U.S. President鈥檚 actions.
- On October 3, Rachel was interviewed for a KUOW/NPR article on the federalization of National Guard troops for deployment to Portland, Oregon: . In the article, Rachel is quoted: 鈥淭hese are not carte blanche authorities to call up the National Guard and to federalize them and put them under the president鈥檚 chain of command based on any reason the president wants to.鈥 Rachel forcefully continues: 鈥淲e do not have massive riots,鈥 鈥淸w]e don鈥檛 have the inability of ICE agents to conduct their immigration enforcement actions. You have some graffiti on the side of immigration buildings. Graffiti 鈥 last time I checked 鈥 does not prevent ICE agents from performing their duties.鈥
- On September 18, Rachel served as the Keynote Speaker for the League of Women Voters of Greater Los Angeles at its annual . Rachel鈥檚 45-minute remarks were entitled: .
- On September 15, Rachel was quoted in an AlterNet article entitled: Rachel expressly characterizes the Trump Administration鈥檚 military strikes in the Caribbean and Pacific as 鈥渕urder.鈥
- On September 15, Rachel appeared live on CNN to discuss with Jake Tapper the legality of the Trump Administration鈥檚 lethal strikes against alleged drug smugglers in the Caribbean and Pacific. You can watch the clip of the interview .
- On September 15, Rachel was quoted in a Daily Beast article entitled: In this piece, Rachel states that, 鈥淸t]he lack of transparency by the administration when they鈥檙e using lethal force in the American people鈥檚 name, in a very unique manner, is deeply troubling.鈥
- On September 5, Rachel was quoted in the Miami Herald in an article entitled: In the article, Rachel pointedly critiques the Trump Administration鈥檚 lethal targeting of alleged drug smugglers outside the bounds of any armed conflict.Later, in an October 3 piece, , the Miami Herald again quoted Rachel: 鈥淭he president doesn鈥檛 just get to say we鈥檙e at war . . . [t]his was intentional killing.鈥